This
story appeared on Network World Fusion at
http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2000/0306bradner.html
'Net
Insider:
Conversations in
cyberspace?
By Scott
Bradner
Network World, 03/06/00
I
had a very interesting and philosophical conversation the other day with Kon
Leong, president and CEO of ZipLip. He stopped by my office during a press tour
to talk about ZipLip and its services.
Our conversation started with
the normal fuzzy yet pretty pictures that press tours are built on, but it
quickly shifted to the deep dilemma that confronts anyone in the anonymous
communications business.
ZipLip (www.ziplip.com) is less than 2 years
old and has been offering services on the Internet since July 4, 1999. Apropos
of the company's public launch date, ZipLip offers secure e-mail outsourcing
services to individuals and organizations. Users connect to the ZipLip site
using secure Web browsers to send and receive e-mail and to transfer files. If
requested, ZipLip can also "shred" (the company's word) the documents
after they are read. Individuals using the service can do so with
identification or anonymously.
The need for secure and
destroy-after-reading e-mail in a corporate setting has been made abundantly
clear in the ongoing Microsoft vs. U.S. government court case. For good, and
sometimes not-so-good reasons, individuals also need secure e-mail. It is clear
that people planning the next billion dollar.com company need to be sure their
e-mail is secure. They may be less worried about being sure that old mail gets
shredded, but they do not want outsiders listening in.
In the
corporate world and for many individuals, it is important this mail not be
anonymous (that is, it is important to know who sent the mail). But there are
many reasons users may feel they need to send anonymous mail. People needing
anonymity include those who want to interact with health resources (AIDS help
centers, for example), whistle blowers (both criminal and corporate), battered
women and many others. Other people might use anonymous services for very
different purposes. Child pornography, hate mail, electronic stalking and
terrorism are commonly cited examples.
People such as ZipLip's Kon are
in a particularly tough spot. How should they act? Should they provide the
ability of their users to remain anonymous, or should they insist on some type
of identification from all their users? It is very easy to say anonymity on the
Internet should not be allowed "for the community." But it would be
just as easy to say the police should have cameras in all our houses to catch
lawbreakers.
Leong can be likened to the lead character in the movie
"The Conversation." He cannot ignore the evil that might be done
through his services, but he must not ignore the good. In my opinion, the good
outweighs the bad to such a degree that there is no question that the service
should continue.
But that is easy for me, who does not run such a
service, to say.
Disclaimer: Folks at the Harvard Law School will
argue both sides of this question (sometimes at the same time). But the above
comments are mine alone.
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